Raymond James’ Justin Patterson upgraded the stock to strong buy from outperform. He also hiked his price target on Netflix to $450 per share from $435, implying a 38 percent surge from Thursday’s close.

“Netflix is approaching a profit inflection,” Patterson said in a note Friday. “Coupled with positive app/search data and a solid content slate, we believe there is an upward bias to 2020E Revenue and EPS.”

“Given underperformance in 2H18, vs. traditional media, we believe the combination of positive revisions and emerging signs of long-term profit potential will yield share price outperformance,” Patterson added. He also noted the high viewer numbers from the movie “Bird Box,” and pointed to “Netflix’s advantages in film; convenience, cost, and global distribution.”

“After six months of stock underperformance & key debates emerging about competition, margins & [free cash flow], we think these debates are better understood by investors and reflected in the current stock price,” Sheridan said in a note. “With content spend now at a scale of the major media companies and titles continuing to demonstrate outsized marketplace success, we see the moat around NFLX’s global positioning widening and its long-term secular winner status remaining intact.”

The upgrades from Raymond James and UBS come after a massive surge in Netflix. Since Dec. 24, the stock is up more than 38 percent.

Netflix has also outperformed the other members of the popular “FAANG” trade, which is made up of Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Alphabet. Facebook is up more than 16 percent since Christmas Eve, while Amazon is up 23 percent. Apple and Alphabet, meanwhile, are up less than 10 percent in that time.

Benjamin Swinburne, a Morgan Stanley analyst with an overweight rating on Netflix, said share prices should continue to rise as the company keeps growing in overseas subscribers. “We believe Netflix’s opportunity comes from the nearly $500bn global TV market, of which total subscription OTT still represents less than 5% of revenues,” he said.

Swinburne added: “The shift toward life as a vertically integrated streaming business is accelerating, evident in a declining level of licensing obligations to 3rd parties and a ramp in spending on originals.This should translate into 1) a deeper moat, 2) greater operating leverage, and 3) meaningful FCF long-term.”